Word: bunching
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...sons of veterans and the Loyal Legion of Boston, of which General Porter is a member, to Sanders Theatre. The following have been appointed marshals: K. S. Cate '09, B. D. Hall '09, H. von Kaltenborn '09. Persons not members of the University are requested to bring a small bunch of flowers to place in the transept of Memorial Hall as a memorial offering...
...Boston, of which General Porter is a member, to Sanders Theatre. The following have been appointed marshals for the parade: G. Gund '09, head-marshal; K. S. Cate '09, B. D. Hall '09, H. von Kaltenborn '09. Persons not members of the University are requested to bring a small bunch of flowers to place in the transept of Memorial Hall as a memorial offering. At the annual meeting of the Memorial Society held recently, the following officers were elected for the year 1909-1910: president, President Lowell; vice-president, W. C. Lane '81; secretary, P. F. Perkins '10, treasurer...
...score of 1 to 0, in a fast, clean game. In the first inning two singles coupled with the only error of the afternoon, allowed Andover to score. The second team had men on bases in all except the first inning, but failed to score through inability to bunch hits. Boyer pitched a good game for the second team allowing only four hits, and only three men to reach first base after the first inning. Hall and Foster also played well for Harvard, while Bennet excelled for Andover...
...CRIMSON baseball team will administer its annual drubbing to the Lampoon aggregation of ball-muffers, on the Freshman Diamond, this afternoon, at 4 o'clock sharp. This bunch of pseudo-literary bunco-steerers, whose motto is "millions from advertisements, but not one line of humor," have profited in their business to such a degree that they were able to offer Hans Wagner a fabulous sum to play for them. Although he refused, being unwilling to associate with such an unscrupulous body, these wielders of the shears and paste-pot will undoubtedly pull of some equally delicate bit of delicious humor...
...verse does not call for extended comment. E. E. Hunt's "Autumn" gathers pleasingly a bunch of characteristic detail. The author's sense of smell seems to be exceptionally acute. Most of us would find it hard to describe the odor either of a swarm of bees or of a maiden-hair fern. In "The, Golden Calf" Mr. Pulsifer expounds a false idea. Many men are neither the slaves nor the masters of money--professors, for example. F. Biddle's quatrain is expressed with neatness and restraint, and "The Wind" by Mr. C. P. Aiken is the most imaginative thing...